You can say that Tiktok is destroying our attention spaces, and yet viewers around the world are allocating to see a direct monotonous livestre from a Swedish television station that they have never heard of. Time for the great migration of hawthorn.
For thousands of years, Moose has crossed the River ångerman every spring, traveling in a warm summer habitat. But since 2019, the whole world can look together for three weeks while Sweden’s SVT broadcaster broadcasts its internet migration flow, using over 30 cameras to capture all slow actions.
For the most part, Livestream shows quiet scenes of forests and rivers, and if you are lucky, you can just see a passing wall, without happiness without knowledge of its international superstar. Just just a hawthorn, treading together without care in the world.
Most of the time, the stream is almost silent. Other times, you will hear the gust of wind and birds. Nice nicely, even if you forget that you have left the Livestream tab open on your computer and get jumpscared from a flock of creatures thousands of miles away.
While a Swedish student said AP: “I feel at ease, but at the same time I’m like,” Oh, there is a hawthorn. Oh, what if there is a hawthorn? I can’t go to the toilet! “”
Even overnight, the stream continues. Lack of sunlight, be cursed – night vision cameras will make sure to see every last part of the hawthorn content. However, the strict black and white image evokes “Blert magician project” more than National Geographic. But a spooky look of hawthorn is still a look of the bow.
Last year, 9 million viewers allocated to the SVT Moose course. By comparison, the Discovery Channel shark week without more than 22 million viewers in 2023. Considering that SVT is simply transmitting direct sources of nature with a 15 -person staff, this is a very impressive comparison.
What makes this kind of direct lifestyle so convincing is that it is so drastic different from what we are normally exposed online. Your ticketing food shows you a bitten size videos, so suitable for your interests that it is difficult to look away. YouTubers strictly edit their videos to keep us engaged as long as possible.
But Moose doesn’t want anything from us. They don’t even know that we are here, cheering them.